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I’m pissed. My problem doesn’t completely
lie with players of videogames. They are free do as they please.
Though, when one only cares about playing games to obsessive levels, I
do get disappointed and want to kick them into realizing they are
capable of so much more than following a list of orders and pushing the
right buttons.

No, my problem is mainly with the fact that by
and large the videogames industry prides itself on making the most
addictive games possible. It’s become a selling point to claim just how
addictive the game is. Or to a lesser degree, a developer will claim
that someone can put in many hours because of its replayability just
for the sake of replay rather than to learn something new.

I
can’t think of any other media; theater, painting, music, film, novels
or other, where the industry works extremely hard to create addictive
works and then further encourages that practice by trying to create
monetization schemes that benefit the most from addicted players.

I
don’t like it. Not at all. I have a very different philosophical
approach to game design. I want to create games that people only need
to play once. They are certainly free to play more than that, but it’s
not necessary because they get a satisfying experience the first time
through.

As a social progressive game designer, I see so many
people who are unknowingly victims, locked inside a vicious cycle,
unable to escape because they don’t know any better. Games have the
power to help free people from being victims in their daily lives.
Whether it’s being a victim of prejudice, bullying, sexual harassment,
social status, economic systems, disability, disease, or even their own
mind, many people are trapped in a vicious cycle of victimization and
can’t find ways to break away.

A game can do that though. It’s
an idea that has yet to gain mainstream acceptance. Critics of the
idea, without being able to see my vision with their own eyes, may call
this a boring serious game, or a not so fun self-help game. It’s more
than that. It’s an inspirational experience that one can relate to and
gain valuable wisdom and knowledge to apply to their own lives.

It’s
the Erin Brockovich of videogames.

Erin Brockovich is a woman
who fought against PG&E in court for polluting the drinking water
of Hinkley, CA. The citizens had an abnormally high rate of cancer and
sickness. Through her hard work and determination, she taught herself
law to take on the powerful utility company, PG&E. The sick
citizens whom she fought for were compensated $333 million after
winning the suit. While money will never help them regain the health
and lives lost, what she did was prove that one person can make a
difference for a community by fighting for their ideals and justice.

Erin
Brockovich’s story inspired millions and became a very successful film,
nominated for several academy awards. Her story is one that can inspire
someone to act in similar ways to fight against an injustice. It’s a
story, no scratch that, it’s an experience that can be replicated in a
game and give people not only the motivation but the real life tools
and skills to apply in their daily lives.

In the United States,
I look around and I see people who are victims of 24 hour news channels
that lack news, victims of a food industry that lacks sustenance and
victims of a health care industry that does not care.

It’s all
shit and it’s all wrong. Everyone knows it, but few act. If only they
knew their power. The games industry thrives on power fantasies, but
not the kinds that can change a person’s life. Instead, it creates
addictive escapist fantasies and many developers pride themselves in
that. They pat each other on the back and tell one another they earned
their pay by making people happy, by putting smiles on their faces. By
helping them escape all shit that’s killing them.

No, they’re
not doing that. Not at all. They’re only delaying the routine of
victimization, if only for a few hours. But when players turn off the
game and get back to their daily lives, the problems are still there.
The media still controls what they think. The food still clogs their
arteries and the drugs still create more problems than they solve,
forcing them to take more drugs. The vicious cycle continues.

They
don’t have to be victims though. My own battle with Crohn’s disease is
proof of that. I was once a victim, of my own vanity. Of my own low
self-esteem. My acne. I took all kinds of acne medications, one after
another. From low grade to the motha-fuckin’ A-Bomb itself, Accutane.
It destroyed my immune system. Years later, I was diagnosed with
Crohn’s disease, an inflammatory bowel disease. Symptoms for people
with Crohn’s can range from blood in the stool, fistulas, bowel
obstructions and uncontrollable diarrhea.

It’s a shitty way to
live… I can joke about it because my Crohn’s is now in remission. I
learned how to break free from the vicious cycle by not listening to my
pharmaceutical brainwashed doctors. Instead, I listened to my gut and
changed my lifestyle and diet. It took a lot of hard work and
dedication, but my story proves the benefits one can wield by refusing
to be a victim.

I don’t think of Crohn’s as a curse. It’s a
gift. I now eat healthier than ever before and love to cook. I don’t
take life for granted. My experience proves people don’t have to be
victims, not of their relationships, society, technology, corporations,
government or of themselves.

However, people aren’t going to get
there without a little help. A game can be the hammer that smashes the
chains and breaks them free. But the kinds of games the industry
strives to make aren’t going to help anyone get there any sooner. To
help people realize their full potential and help improve the world, we
can start by breaking the vicious cycle on addictive multi-play games.
In this complex and increasingly dishonest world we live in, it’s time
the videogame industry stepped up to the responsibility it has when
wielding such a powerful yet largely untapped medium.

Also posted on GDAM (Game Design Aspect of the Month) blog and my personal blog, Reiding...

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